Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

Interviewed on the Viacom v. Google Discovery Decision

I was interviewed today for this afternoon's edition of Marketplace; of course you never know if they'll use it or not.

The topic was the strange — and to my mind wrongly decided — decision ordering massive disclosure of user YouTube video-viewing records in Viacom v. Google. For a very good explanation of most of the problems with the decision see EFF's Kurt Opsahl's discussion at Court Ruling Will Expose Viewing Habits of YouTube Users.

Based on the cursory discussion in the decision, I don't think the Judge read the Video Privacy Protection Act (aka “the Bork Bill”) right.

The decision is, if anything, worse than Opsahl says, in that the court also orders disclosure of information relating to “private” videos — videos marked for limited distribution — including the title and information about who uploaded them. While it may be the case that some of these videos are trying to share copyright protected materials under the radar, it is undoubtedly the case that many of these videos are (1) truly private and of very limited distribution and (2) the author would be identifiable from the associated information ordered to be disclosed. (The order also is opaque as to what sort of precautions if any Viacom would be required to take to prevent leakage of this data.)

There are some procedural obstacles to getting an immediate interlocutory appeal of this decision, but assuming they can be surmounted I think there's a strong chance of reversal before the 2nd Circuit.

This is only one of the first in what is sure to be a long series of fishing expeditions in the increasingly elaborate databases being created about our online behavior. It will get worse once our ISPs start tracking our every move in order, they will say, to better advertise to us. Video viewing records have the peculiar advantage of being protected by an unusually powerful statute, the so-called 'Bork Bill'. Many other records won't have that (although some will have ECPA), and that is an issue which needs urgent attention.

Posted in Law: Privacy | 3 Comments

La Disparition

This is a cute idea: Barack Obama Bumper Stickers! — a different one, the site promises, for each of the 50 states.

Only, the actual list of states is missing Florida:

States So Far:AL, AK AZ, CA, KS, LA, MO, NE, NV, NH, NM, OH, OK, SD, TX, VA, WA, WI.

States To Go: AR, CO, CT, DE, GL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KY, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MT, ND, NJ, NY, NC, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, UT, VT, WV, WY.

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 3 Comments

One Cheer for McDonalds

I am no great fan of McDonalds — I don't think I've been inside one more than twice in the last decade — but I think they deserve praise for this letter responding to the threat that has now matured as this boycott campaign.

(found via Good as You, AFA will try to tarnish Golden Arches)

Note that I support the right of people to organize boycotts against companies whose policies they don't like, indeed celebrate it as a valued form of citizen activism. And I also support the right of the rest of us to make fun of misguided boycotts.

Posted in Law: Everything Else | Comments Off on One Cheer for McDonalds

Today’s Discovery In Applied Informatics

I have found what I believe to be one of the last types of information for which search on the Internet remains utterly useless: finding where fireworks stands might located in the South Dade area.

I did discover that there's a store in Key Largo, but that's kinda far.

The big July 4 celebration in Coral Gables at the Biltmore has been canceled again — perhaps permanently. And the family doesn't want one of those boxes they sell in Publix this year…

Posted in Internet, Miami | Comments Off on Today’s Discovery In Applied Informatics

PoliticsTV Looks Back on Recent Political Videos

Politics TV has a July 4 Special: 2008's Best Campaign Web Videos So Far -Pt 2

They put it online, so I guess we don't need to wait until Friday to see it.

My vote for funniest is still the Gravel moment of zen.

But I suspect “yes we can” will go down in history as the best video of the campaign.

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 1 Comment

The Snark IS a Boojum

The DC Circuit has now issued a redacted version of Judge Garland's opinion for the Court in Parhat v. Gates. It's worth a read.

Notably, the Court accepts the government's view of its own powers and of the standard of proof required in a Combatant Status Review Tribunal (CSRT) and nonetheless holds that the government failed to produce meaningful evidence to support its claim that Parhat and other Uighers were in a group “associated” with al Qaida, or the Taliban.

The decision points to the very tentative (and unsourced!) language in the documents proferred to the CSTR

… the principal evidence against Parhat regarding the second and third elements of DOD’s definition of enemy combatant consists of four government intelligence documents. The documents make assertions — often in haec verba — about activities undertaken by ETIM, and about that organization’s relationship to al Qaida and the Taliban. The documents repeatedly describe those activities and relationships as having “reportedly” occurred, as being “said to” or “reported to” have happened, and as things that “may” be true or are “suspected of” having taken place. But in virtually every instance, the documents do not say who “reported” or “said” or “suspected” those things. Nor do they provide any of the underlying reporting upon which the documents’ bottom-line assertions are founded, nor any assessment of the reliability of that reporting. Because of those omissions, the Tribunal could not and this court cannot assess the reliability of the assertions in the documents. And because of this deficiency, those bare assertions cannot sustain the determination that Parhat is an enemy combatant.

Insistence that the Tribunal and court have an opportunity to assess the reliability of the record evidence is not simply a theoretical exercise. Parhat contends that the ultimate source of key assertions in the four intelligence documents is the government of the People’s Republic of China, and he offers substantial support for that contention. Parhat further maintains that Chinese reporting on the subject of the Uighurs cannot be regarded as objective, and offers substantial support for that proposition as well.

The government does not dispute that DOD’s standards and procedures require that the CSRT be able to assess the reliability of the record evidence. See Unclassified Oral Arg. Tr. 39. It argues, however, that the Tribunal was able to do so here — for two reasons.

First, the government suggests that several of the assertions in the intelligence documents are reliable because they are made in at least three different documents. We are not persuaded. Lewis Carroll notwithstanding, the fact that the government has “said it thrice” does not make an allegation true. See LEWIS CARROLL, THE HUNTING OF THE SNARK 3 (1876) (“I have said it thrice: What I tell you three times is true.”). In fact, we have no basis for concluding that there are independent sources for the documents’ thrice-made assertions. To the contrary, as noted in Part III, many of those assertions are made in identical language, suggesting that later documents may merely be citing earlier ones, and hence that all may ultimately derive from a single source. And as we have also noted, Parhat has made a credible argument that — at least for some of the assertions — the common source is the Chinese government, which may be less than objective with respect to the Uighurs. Other assertions in the documents may ultimately rely on interview reports (not provided to the Tribunal) of Uighur detainees, who may have had no first-hand knowledge and whose speculations may have been transformed into certainties in the course of being repeated by report writers. Second, the government insists that the statements made in the documents are reliable because the State and Defense Departments would not have put them in intelligence documents were that not the case. This comes perilously close to suggesting that whatever the government says must be treated as true, thus rendering superfluous both the role of the Tribunal and the role that Congress assigned to this court. We do not in fact know that the departments regard the statements in those documents as reliable; the repeated insertion of qualifiers indicating that events are “reported” or “said” or “suspected” to have occurred suggests at least some skepticism. Nor do we know whether the departments rely on those documents for decisionmaking purposes in the form in which they were presented to the Tribunal, or whether they supplement them with backup documentation and reliability assessments before using them to take actions of consequence.

(footnotes removed)

This was a very mixed panel, including arch-conservative Chief Judge Sentelle. When judges from across the spectrum are quoting Lewis Carrol to the government, there's a sign that the jig is up.

Posted in Guantanamo | 2 Comments